Resources on surrogacy (EWL Secretariat, 23/07/2013)

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Resources on surrogacy (EWL Secretariat, 23/07/2013)

Resources on surrogacy (EWL Secretariat, 23/07/2013)
Here are some resources for EWL members to reflect on the issue of surrogacy from a feminist perspective.
Don’t hesitate to send us more! ([email protected])
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Surrogacy from a feminist perspective
On surrogacy in general
Surrogacy in France
Surrogacy in Ireland
Surrogacy and India
The reality of surrogacy: websites of clinics…
Surrogacy from a feminist perspective
Varat och Varan, Kajsa Ekis Ekman, 2010 = “Prostitution, the abolition of the victim and post-modernism's
defence of the status-quo”
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Article in English about her book.
Article in Danish about her book.
Article en français sur son livre.
Traduction en français du livre : L’être et la marchandise. Prostitution, maternité de substitution et
dissociation de soi, Kajsa Ekis Ekman, 2013, M éditeur
Blog of Kajsa Ekis Ekman: http://kajsaekisekman.blogspot.be/.
Corps en miettes, Sylviane Agacinski, 2011. Article de presse sur le livre : La « barbarie » des mères
porteuses, Libération, 15/04/2009.
Christine Le Doaré, feminist activist, ex-director of the LGBT center of Paris-Ile-de-France :
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Asymétrie reproductive et gestation pour autrui (GPA), 2011, in Têtu magazine
GPA, depuis quand l’Etat français cède-t-il au chantage par voie de circulaire ?, 2013
Press release / communiqué de presse, Femmes Prévoyantes Socialistes, 16 mai 2013, « Femmes à louer :
assez ! »
Campaign of the Swedish Women’s Lobby against surrogacy: Feminist no to surrogacy
Abuses of women’s human rights in third-party reproduction, Kathleen Sloan, human rights advocate
specializing in global feminism and a member of the Board of Directors of the National Organization for
Women (NOW).
On surrogacy in general
A Comparative Study on the Regime of Surrogacy in EU Member States, European Parliament, May 2013.
This study provides a preliminary overview of the wide range of policy concerns relating to surrogacy as a
practice at national, European and global level. It undertakes an extensive examination of national legal
approaches to surrogacy. It also analyses existing European Union law and the law of the European
Convention of Human Rights to determine what obligations and possibilities surround national and
transnational surrogacy. The study concludes that it is impossible to indicate a particular legal trend across
the EU, however all Member States appear to agree on the need for a child to have clearly defined legal
parents and civil status.
Why surrogacy should not be allowed, Riitta Burrell, dosent, University of Helsinki, October 22, 2012,
Copenhagen, PPT presentation.
Historical lineages of commercial surrogacy and the contemporary Indian gestational market, Catherine
Waldby, professor, University of Sydney, Australia, October 22, 2012, Copenhagen, PPT presentation.
Gestational Surrogacy: Could be a way to reproduction? Pros and Cons, Peris Clementina, Turin, Italy, 2011,
Georgian Medical News, Page 11. Medical aspects of surrogacy.
Transnational surrogacy and international human rights law, Barbara Stark, USA, July 26, 2012. Why the
domestic family laws of the participating states are inadequate to address the surrogacy problem, how
international human rights law provides some useful guidelines. The argument is that, at the very least,
where surrogacy is allowed, the protection of well-established human rights norms should be assured. In
some cases, this may be accomplished through regulation or contractual provisions, such as the assurance
for the gestational mother of free pre-natal care. In other cases, this may be more difficult, such as
treatment for as yet unknown conditions that may result from the hormonal treatments necessary for
surrogacy. If such assurances are impossible, surrogacy should be barred as a violation of human rights.
Surrogacy: Exploitation or Violation of Intimacy?, John Ozolins. Human flourishing cannot be separated from
one’s relationships with others and any circumstance which is destructive of such relationships must be
considered immoral. The surrogate, unless she is treated as an object or merely as a means to an end, is
intimately involved in the relationships between the child and its putative parents and important
relationships become ambiguous and so harmed. Furthermore, if this view if rejected, then the feminist
argument that surrogacy always involves the exploitation of the surrogate renders it immoral.
The socio-economic struggle for equality: the black surrogate mother, Anita L. Allen, 1991, Harvard
university. This third article contemplates another facet of surrogacy-gestational surrogacy. I will comment
on Johnson v. Calvert, a case involving a Black surrogate mother, and on whether gestational surrogacy by
Black women simply puts a new face on an old problem: whites owning Black women's wombs.
Surrogacy in France
Mères porteuses: extension du domaine de l’aliénation, Terra nova, 2010. Plusieurs initiatives ont vu le jour,
à gauche, en faveur d’une légalisation de la pratique des mères porteuses (Gestation Pour Autrui), associée à
l’idée d’une vision « progressiste » de la parentalité. Le recours aux mères porteuses est, en réalité,
absolument contraire à tout engagement de nature « progressiste ». Tandis que les partisans de la GPA
soutiennent que la pratique des mères porteuses, là où elle est légale, se déroule dans l’ensemble de
manière positive, une étude concrète de ces pratiques aboutit à une conclusion inverse.
L'Agence de la biomédecine se prononce contre les mères porteuses, Marianne Gomez, 2011, France. Le
conseil d'orientation de l'Agence est contre la pratique due à la liste impressionnante des conditions qu'il
faudrait remplir pour pouvoir contrôler cette pratique.
Should surrogate mothers be legalised? Ten keys to the debate, Sophie Caillat, 2009. Pros cons and the
situation in France.
Surrogacy in Ireland
Surrogacy, parentage, and citizenship: Ireland in the wider world, National Parliament of the Republic of
Ireland, 2013. Surrogacy in Ireland: debate on consequences on children protection revealing from
problematic parentage. The article presents the complexity of the problem highlighting the ethical issues,
general concerns, presenting definitions, parentage and guardianship, international surrogacy and the Irish
legislation case study
The ethical case against surrogate motherhood: what we can learn from the law of other European
countries, The Iona Institute promotes the place of marriage and religion in society; member of the
Fundamental Rights Platform of the European Union; 2012, Ireland, Dublin. One of the chief reasons is that
surrogacy commodifies the human body. With surrogacy the child becomes the mere object of a legal
transaction, while the surrogate mother is used, effectively, as an incubator. Such commodification in itself
violates the dignity of both the surrogate mother and the child. A child born after a surrogacy agreement
may have up to five adults claiming parent’s rights over him or her. Surrogacy is presented as a method of
medically assisted reproduction among others, a treatment for infertility. It is often depicted as a generous
altruistic action meant to help couples who cannot naturally have children.
Surrogacy and India
Surrogate Motherhood- Ethical or Commercial, Centre for Social Research (CSR), India, 2011. In depth
analyses of the situation of surrogate mothers in India.
Ethical concerns for maternal surrogacy and reproductive tourism, Raywat Deonandan, Samantha Green,
Amanda van Beinum, 2012, Journal of Medical Ethics. Reproductive medical tourism is by some accounts a
multi-billion dollar industry globally. The seeking by clients in high income nations of surrogate mothers in
low income nations, particularly India, presents a set of largely unexamined ethical challenges. In this paper,
eight such challenges are elucidated to spur discussion and eventual policy development towards protecting
the rights and health of vulnerable women of the Global South.
Reproductive Tourism in India: Ethical and Legal Concerns, University of Bonn, 29 July 2010. Debrief review
of articles. Panel to be held at the European Conference on Modern South Asian Studies
Commercial surrogacy and fertility tourism in India, Kari Points, India. Japanese couple traveled to India in
late 2007 to hire a surrogate mother to bear a child for them. The doctor arranged a surrogacy contract with
a married Indian woman with children but one month before the child was born the couple divorced.
Although the husband wanted to raise the child, his ex-wife did not. Suddenly, Baby Manji had three
mothers—the intended mother who had contracted for the surrogacy, the egg donor, and the gestational
surrogate—yet legally she had none. The surrogacy contract did not cover a situation such as this. Nor did
any existing laws. The situation soon grew into a legal and diplomatic crisis. The case of Baby Manji
illustrates the complexity and challenges faced by institutions in the face of emerging technologies.
The reality of surrogacy: websites of clinics…
Ukraine: http://en.surrogacy-ukraine.com/
USA: http://www.surrogacygroup.com/page3.html
India: http://surrogacycentreindia.com/